NINA EI OO LS

PUBLIC LECTURES

Each year the University arranges a series of public lectures, and
brings to Madison for that purpose a number of distinguished speakers.
The aim-is to provide lectures of general interest and to have them cover a
wide range of subjects. The lectures are free to the students and to the
public.

ACADEMIC YEAR 1929-30

1929
October 28. David Moore Robinson—‘The Parthenon and Fifth Century
Greek Art.”
October 31. C. Douglas Booth—“‘Anglo-American Relations and World
Peace.”

November 6. Grant Showerman—“Italy and the Vatican: I—The Pope
Is Crowned; II—The Pope Comes Out.”

November 8. George Young—‘“Labour Party Personalities and Policies.”

November 11. Alanson B. Houghton—‘War and Peace.”

November 13. Hans Prinzhorn—‘The Art of the Insane Compared with
the Art of Children, of Primitives, and of the Present
Time.”

December 2. W. B. Cannon—“‘How We Stay Normal.”

December 38. Alfred Lande—‘Causal Determination in Wave Theory and
Corpuscular Theory of Matter.”

December 4. Robert S. Conway—“Virgil’s Vision of the World.”

December 5. W. B. Cannon—“What Strong Emotions Do To Us.”

December 5. Robert S. Conway—‘“Poetry and Government—A Study of
the Power of Virgil.”

December 5. Paul Monroe—‘Democracy and Education in Japan.”

December 6. Paul Monroe—“Significant World Movements in Education.”

December 12. Howard Giles—‘Science and Art.”

December 13. Howard Giles—‘Dynamic Symmetry as a Release of Power.”

1930

January 10. Wolfgang Liepe—“Das Drama Der Gegenwart in Deutsch-
land” (in German).

January 13. Franco Bruno Averardi—‘The Spirit of Florence and Siena
in the Trecento.”

January 14. J. Harris Levy—“The Ruins of Angkor.”

January 14. Friedrich Schoenemann—“The Americanization of Europe.”

January 15. Friedrich Schoenemann—“German University Problems of
Today.”

January 16. C. Sanford Terry—“The Chorales of Bach.”

January 17. O. E. Baker—“The Outlook for Agriculture in the Next
Quarter Century.”

January 17. C. Sanford Terry—“Bach: The Historical Approach.”

January 20. John George Bucher—‘The Germany of Today.”

January 20. Bolton C. Waller—“The Irish Free State.”

February 28. Robert T. Wallace—“Pioneer Problems of the Canadian

Northwest.”

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